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The Delaney Clause No Food Additive Shall be Deemed to be Safe if it is Found to Induce Cancer when Ingested by Man or Animals, or if it is Found, After Tests which Are Appropriate for the Evaluation of the Safety of Food Additives, to Induce Cancer in Man or Animals

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1977 Saccharin Study and Labeling Act Saccharin Warning "Use of this product may be hazardous to your health. This product contains saccharin which has been determined to cause cancer in laboratory animals."

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Oct. 31, 1997 NIEHS PR #23-97 NIEHS CONTACT: Bill Grigg, 919/541-2605 Tom Hawkins, 919/541-1402 NTP: Sandy Lange, 919/541-2373 Panel Recommends That Saccharin Remain on U.S. List of Carcinogens The National Toxicology Program's advisory panel on the federal government's Report on Carcinogens today recommended the continued listing of saccharin in the ninth edition of this official report of cancer-causing substances. Saccharin thus may continue to be listed as an "anticipated" human carcinogen, as it has been since 1981. It has never been listed in the stronger category of "known" human carcinogen

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Repeal of Saccharin Warning Label Criticized Michael F. Jacobson, Ph.D., executive director of the nonprofit Center for Science in the Public Interest, had the following comment on Congress' repeal of the warning label on saccharin-containing products. Lawmakers generally oppose legislating through the appropriations process, which does not allow for substantive inquiries and hearings. But apparently Congress had no qualms about skipping hearings and using the Health and Human Services Appropriations Bill (HR 4577) to eliminate the warning label on products containing saccharin.

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Not mutagenic Is not metabolized Is rapidly eliminated from the body Does not form DNA adducts Numerous negative animal studies Negative human epi studies (Armstrong & Doll, 1975)

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« The Onion« The Onion | 11/5/2003 Americans Demand Increased Governmental Protection From Selves NEW YORK—Alarmed by the unhealthy choices they make every day, more and more Americans are calling on the government to enact legislation that will protect them from their own behavior. "The government is finally starting to take some responsibility for the effect my behavior has on others," said New York City resident Alec Haverchuk, 44, who is prohibited by law from smoking in restaurants and bars. "But we have a long way to go. I can still light up on city streets and in the privacy of my own home. I mean, legislators acknowledge that my cigarette smoke could give others cancer, but don't they care about me, too?" "It's not just about Americans eating too many fries or cracking their skulls open when they fall off their bicycles," said Los Angeles resident Rebecca Burnie, 26. "It's a financial issue, too. I spend all my money on trendy clothes and a nightlife that I can't afford. I'm $23,000 in debt, but the credit-card companies keep letting me spend. It's obscene that the government allows those companies to allow me to do this to myself. Why do I pay my taxes?"